Style bug: american-statistical-association
Using the ASA citation style, I get a bug when I cite a work with a reference to a specific page (or table or whatever).
The style for the inline citation does not include a space between the comma and the part. E.g.:
> (Smith 2025,tbl. 1)
From the thread on the initial request for this (https://forums.zotero.org/discussion/comment/218911/#Comment_218911) I saw a suggestion that Journal of Consumer Research is a close match, but it has at least one substantial difference (JCR seems to include full names in the bibliography while AmStat seems to use lastname and initials.)
I think the american-statistical-association citation style may also be incorrect in its handling of URLs. When I cite a software package, the URL does not appear in the Bibliography. The version I found online says:
> Citations of Electronically Published Documents
> In most cases, such citations will take the form of an author’s name, title of the document/publications, the date of publication, and the document’s availability, shown by its URL.
[https://static.primary.prod.gcms.the-infra.com/static/site/jssam/document/ASA_Style_Guide_Final?node=48c69951b56114fdf549]
I would have thought a software package would count as an 'electronically published document' for the purposes of that.
The style for the inline citation does not include a space between the comma and the part. E.g.:
> (Smith 2025,tbl. 1)
From the thread on the initial request for this (https://forums.zotero.org/discussion/comment/218911/#Comment_218911) I saw a suggestion that Journal of Consumer Research is a close match, but it has at least one substantial difference (JCR seems to include full names in the bibliography while AmStat seems to use lastname and initials.)
I think the american-statistical-association citation style may also be incorrect in its handling of URLs. When I cite a software package, the URL does not appear in the Bibliography. The version I found online says:
> Citations of Electronically Published Documents
> In most cases, such citations will take the form of an author’s name, title of the document/publications, the date of publication, and the document’s availability, shown by its URL.
[https://static.primary.prod.gcms.the-infra.com/static/site/jssam/document/ASA_Style_Guide_Final?node=48c69951b56114fdf549]
I would have thought a software package would count as an 'electronically published document' for the purposes of that.